Robert Plant Solo Sheet Music - 1967


A very rare 1967 sheet music for Robert Plant's pre-Led Zeppelin solo record "Our Song" (which was released on CBS Records.) The sheet music folds open, but the front is obviously most important as it features a photo of young Mr. Plant with mutton-chop sideburns, a full two years before Zeppelin's first record was released. It measures 8 1/2" x 11" and is in excellent condition. Rare !

NME - Originals - The Beatles - Solo Years


NME Orignials: Beatles - The Solo Years

NME Originals proudly presents BEATLES: THE SOLO YEARS 1970-80, a magazine dedicated to charting the careers of JOHN LENNON, PAUL McCARTNEY, GEORGE HARRISON and RINGO STARR in the decade after the break-up.

Played out against a backdrop of reunion rumours, the '70s proved to be a significant part of The Beatles story, with the Fab Four showing flashes of solo brilliance that could rival their collective output.

From 'IMAGINE' to 'BACK OF BOOGALOO, from 'BAND ON THE RUN' to 'MY SWEET LORD', this magazine concludes the Beatles story by republishing many of the solo interviews and reviews for the first time since their original publication in the pages of NME and Melody Maker.

Add to this some truly fantastic photography and newly commissioned articles that tell the story of The Beatles split and bring their careers right up to date, this magazine is a must for every Beatles fan

NME Originals: Gods Of Rock

Following the infamous volumes on Glam!, Swinging London in the 1960's, Punk and The Beatles comes NME ORIGINALS: GODS OF ROCK

148 pages packed with some of the greatest rock 'n' roll stories ever, reprinted from the archives of NME and its sister publication, Melody Maker.

Full of rare photos and salacious interviews, GODS OF ROCK includes Lynyrd Skynyrd's Ronnie Van Zandt telling you how to stomp a guy half to death in a barroom brawl, Ted Nugent insisting that "Anyone who digs adventurous music would get off sleeping in a dead sheep", and Ozzy Osbourne getting arrested for pissing on the Alamo. Freddie Mercury boasts that his slacks are so tight that one lady writer rightly guessed his religion, Axl Rose does his damnedest to get a riot going, Perry Farrell shows you videos of himself shooting up and Lemmy claims to be a "reincarnated Nazi".

Johnny Rotten gets beaten up by the cops, Eddie Van Halen pummels a wall until his knuckles bleed, Kurt Cobain denies doing smack, Johnny Thunders chucks up on the tarmac at Paris Airport, Slipknot punch each other in the face, Stevie Nicks refers to cocaine as a little more-ish, like "Sarah Lee Cheese Cake" and Courtney Love is dragged screaming and kicking from somebody else's stage.

Featuring Led Zeppelin, Thin Lizzy, The Rolling Stones, The Cult, The Runaways, New York Dolls and many, many more, NME ORIGINALS: GODS OF ROCK is the most lairy, lewd, ludicrous and life-affirming read on the planet.

NME - 60's - Originals - Swinging London


NME Originals: 60s

The Beatles, Stones, Who, Hendrix and the bands who made the scene in Swinging London

Why did Jim Morrison get his cock out? Why did Bob Dylan tell us to "keep a good head and always carry a lightbulb"? Why did Jimi Hendrix call The Monkees "dishwater"? And why did The Who's Pete Townshend predict that John Lennon would be beheaded?

The answers to these, and many other great mysteries of rock are revealed in NME Originals: 60s, a stunning new 148 page magazine compiled from the archives of NME and its sister paper Melody Maker. On sale now for a mere £4.99, NME Originals: 60s reprints for the first time since their original publication the cream of Swinging London's music coverage including the first ever reviews of Pink Floyd's psychedelic opus 'Arnold Layne', The Rolling Stones' morality-bothering 'Let's Spend the Night Together' and Bob Dylan's mindboggling 'Highway 61 Revisited'.

The closest you'll ever get to taking a time machine back to relive those heady days of pot parties and paisley blouses, NME Originals: 60s is your chance to take tea with The Small Faces, have a nosey round Tom Jones' bachelor pad, hobnob with Elvis in Vegas, get mightily zonked at the UFO, casually chinwag with Otis Redding, plot style revolution with The Kinks, talk miniskirts with Cilla, apartheid with Dusty and take a cool stroll down Carnaby Street with Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich.

Take your front row seats for James Brown's amazing soul revue in Brixton, Cream's majestic farewell at The Albert Hall and The Rolling Stones' tribute to Brian Jones in Hyde Park. Marc Bolan will tell you about his guardian angel, David Bowie will talk football with the boys in the park and mods and rockers will mash it up all along the seafront.

Lovingly collected together, the one glossy magazine with the groovy Jimi cover, NME Originals: 60s is the "must buy" magazine for all lovers of rock music.